Media Watch: Times blames Mansion tax fears for London house price drop. But where’s the evidence?

The survey cited doesn't mention the Mansion tax, so the Times points to a 'general feeling'

 

A spectre is haunting London – the spectre of Labour’s Mansion tax. Fears over the proposed charge on £2million homes are driving down house prices in London, despite a rise in prices in the rest of the country. The Times has the scoop: ‘Mansion tax fears depress house prices across London’.

If we leave aside for a moment whether house prices in London couldn’t do with a bit of depression, what evidence is there that ‘Mansion tax-dread’ is the cause of this drop in prices?

Well, there isn’t any – at least, not in the Times story, which cites a survey by the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS) for February, released today, which found a rise in house prices nationally, and a price decrease in London.

Trouble is, the survey doesn’t mention the Mansion tax, either in its sample of responses or in it’s analysis. Neither does the RISC’s press release on its website. In fact, the only link made between lower prices in London and the Labour policy is in the Times piece itself:

“London homeowners are wary about moving because of extra fees and taxes they might face from a new government in May. Labour has already promised a tax on properties worth more than £2million, and there is a general feeling that politicians will step up their efforts to tap into property wealth for money to fund public spending.”

Ah yes, a “general feeling”. No evidence is provided for this assertion, or for “wariness” among homeowners.

Of the scores of RICS members quoted in the survey, which are only a sample of the 324 responses collected, just two mention the Mansion tax, and only one of these is based in London.

And with house prices rising nationally, and Labour’s policy intended for the whole country, why is this fear of the Mansion tax only gripping London?

Besides all of that, a 28 per cent drop in the ludicrously high price of a home in London will be music to the ears of many potential buyers. A report from the charity Shelter recently found the average house price in London is now almost 15 times the average wage.

Plus the Mansion tax will only affect homes worth over £2million – less than 0.5 per cent of all homes in the country – and only when the owners earn more than £42,000 a year.

So if the Times is going to claim fears about Labour’s Mansion tax are driving down house prices in London, their evidence ought to be more than a “feeling”.

Adam Barnett is a staff writer at Left Foot Forward. Follow him on Twitter

64 Responses to “Media Watch: Times blames Mansion tax fears for London house price drop. But where’s the evidence?”

  1. Dave Stewart

    I find this insistence that “ordinary” people own homes worth more the £2 million” odd. If you live in a home worth more than £2 million the likelihood is your a wealthy. I expect there are a vanishingly small number of people who are not cash rich who live in £2 million + houses and they are protected by the income level you need to earn before you are included in the proposals. If 0.5 % of houses are worth more than £2 million how can many “ordinary” people live in such homes?

  2. Guest

    So you deny poverty in the UK. Real poverty gets ignored because simply not deep enough for you. Never mind those non-essentials like food and shelter, in your world.

    While being a nice capitalist looter, crossing the border the right don’t want the 99% to cross.

  3. Lesmond Nyjacks

    Leon, you are not a “mutulalist” as you so often proffer, you are in fact a vile totalitarian communist, you are incapable of accepting that anyone may hold a different opinion to yours, your hateful coercion has not worked anywhere else in the world, from Cuba to Venezuela.

  4. Lesmond Nyjacks

    Leon, with you in charge people that you dislike will only move once.
    To the Gulag.

  5. Lesmond Nyjacks

    “You’re trying to avoid paying a little tax.”
    More projection, you vile marxist.

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